No, "audience" is not a verb; it is a noun that refers to a group of people who watch, listen to, or engage with a performance, event, or presentation. The verb form related to "audience" is "to audience," which means to present or perform for an audience, but it is less commonly used. In general usage, "audience" strictly denotes the people experiencing something rather than an action.
The correct verb is claps, the subject noun 'audience' is a singular noun (one audience). Notice that the singular possessive adjective 'its' is used to describe the appreciation of the audience.
In American English, "audience" takes a singular verb, so the correct form would be "The audience was listening." In British English, however, collective nouns like "audience" often take a plural verb, and "The audience were listening" would be correct.
audience
Any verb that is suitable for what you are trying to say. eg.Prime time is the time at which a radio or television audience is expected to be greatest. - verb =is
It is an adverb. i.e. a word that describes a verb or an action.
The correct verb is claps, the subject noun 'audience' is a singular noun (one audience). Notice that the singular possessive adjective 'its' is used to describe the appreciation of the audience.
In American English, "audience" takes a singular verb, so the correct form would be "The audience was listening." In British English, however, collective nouns like "audience" often take a plural verb, and "The audience were listening" would be correct.
audience
Any verb that is suitable for what you are trying to say. eg.Prime time is the time at which a radio or television audience is expected to be greatest. - verb =is
Yes, tap dancing is a verb. A verb is a word used to describe an action, state, or occurrence. Tap dancing is an action. For example "She tap dances in front of the audience."
The verb form of laugher is laugh.Other verbs are laughs, laughing and laughed."I will laugh in your face"."We were laughing all night"."The audience laughed at the comedian".
It is an adverb. i.e. a word that describes a verb or an action.
skating is the participle form of the verb "to skate"
Mesmerizing is a verb, a noun, and an adjective. Example uses:As a verb: He was mesmerizing the audience with the beauty of playing.As a noun: Mesmerizing was once considered an evil doers skill.As an adjective: The mesmerizing view from our balcony was worth the extra cost.
spoke is a transitive verb if the sentence contains a direct object for it. Example of transitive use: He spoke a few words of wisdom to the group. Intransitive: She spoke pleasantly to me.
Intermission is not a verb, because it is not an action. Intermission is a noun that means the period in between acts in a play or other event where the audience gets to stand up and stretch while they change scenes. :)
As a verb: The comic would gibe one audience member for the laughter of the rest of the audience. As a noun: What a jibe I got on my new hairstyle, like a bird too close to the fan.